t-rave":1lp9grkq said:
Not in tone but as a marketplace sleeper, and a reliable, timeless ,workhorse?
I remember in the early 90's JCM's could be found in any pawn shop and on consignment for next to nothing ( I bought a mint 50 watter with a mint marshall 2x12 cab for $400 at a local store..it sounded amazing and I never should have sold it)..
the dual rec is sort of in that place right now in my opinion...
not the latest or greatest, but there is a huge amount of these amps in the used marketplace that are readily available, reasonably priced, and always a solid workhorse like the jcm!
and like marshall many think mesa hasn't really produced anything more signature or better since
I think that is what Mesa/Boogie intended for the Dual Rectifier in the first place. They wanted to capture a cornerstone of the market, as Marshall did with their amps and in particular the JCM 800. I believe that Mesa/Boogie heavily saturated the market with Dual Rectifiers, pushed them onto artists & music studios, lent them out for free, provided them as backlines for many gigs. Even some of their marketing babble says how nearly every band at Woodstock '99 had a Recto.
Originally the Recto was marketed as an alternative to the JCM 800. And it was originally adapted from a Soldano SLO which was a suped-up modified Marshall...
While the Mark series Mesa/Boogie amps had/ve their niche, they weren't as common as the Marshall JCM amps. They still seem quite exclusive in some odd way. Not "posh" exclusive, just not "run of the mill". I reckon Randall Smith was seething all through the 1980s that the Mark series weren't "run of the mill", so by the end of that decade he set out to go against the Mark series and push the design profusively (sp?) for the following twenty years. Marshall already had nearly 30 years of reputation behind them so Randall had to go harder to claim his stake so to speak. I reckon he went into the nu-metal scene to associate his Recto with it, since that became a big trend, which in part was rejecting the lead sounds of the 1980s (of which the Mark series excel at).
While I do (and actually have) got some cool tones out of a Recto, and heard some good tones out of them, the majority of Recto tones are appalling. They were used in such a stereotypical fashion, that horrid "nu-metal rumble" or that farty burping 'light rock' sound (think Bowling for Soup or Blink 182) which I despise completely. I still remember having arguments about how bad those amps would sound.
I do think that Mesa/Boogie have done better with all their amps in comparison to Marshall over the last 20 years. While I might not like the tones, the innovation and build quality and features have been rather good I reckon. I think the new lunchbox Recto is a great idea.